Rebel Creamery Drops Some Truth Bombs in New Ads

  Rassegna Stampa, Social
image_pdfimage_print

Leaders from Glossier, Shopify, Mastercard and more will take the stage at Brandweek to share what strategies set them apart and how they incorporate the most valued emerging trends. Register to join us this September 23–26 in Phoenix, Arizona.

In this Sophie’s Choice situation, the hits just keep coming for a kid named Darren. First he learns that his sister, Sarah, is the apple of his mother’s eye, and then his entire world flips upside down with the revelation that Dad isn’t really Dad.

And all because of Rebel Creamery, whose better-for-you product serves as a frosty truth serum for the snacking matriarch in a campaign aptly tagged, “Don’t Sugarcoat It, Favorite Child.”

The harshly hilarious hero video, from agency of record TDA Boulder, uses the brand’s low-sugar content as inspiration for pull-no-punches marketing. 

Digital and social spots continue the frankness, saying that “not every baby can be the cutest baby,” “wearing glasses is not the same as being smart” and “pickleball isn’t a sport.”

The campaign leans into the key product attribute “in a unique way with a rebellious, slightly defiant tone, being willing to say the truths we’re all thinking but don’t often voice,” according to Ashley Bair-Caruso, digital marketing manager for Rebel.

Marketing in the past has focused on “rebelling against sugar,” but the brand was ready to push boundaries for the new work, per creatives.

“Radical candor really impacted our thinking,” Jonathan Schoenberg, executive creative director at TDA Boulder, told ADWEEK. “And I’m an advocate for telling the truth,” even though traditionally, “there’s a lack of directness in advertising.”

Everyday white lies are exposed and truth bombs are dropped in the new campaign for Rebel Creamery.Rebel Creamery

The seeds of the idea were sown in the brief and pushed forward in the brainstorming process, according to Jeremy Seibold, the agency’s creative director and partner, who noted the straight line between the keto-friendly ice cream and a no-BS storytelling aesthetic.

Pagine: 1 2